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Tag: Stock Market

  • The stock market is set up for panic, and it could spark a steep crash, portfolio manager says

    The stock market is set up for panic, and it could spark a steep crash, portfolio manager says

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    • The stock market has the perfect setup for a steep correction, Michael Gayed warned.

    • The portfolio manager pointed to three warning signs flashing in the market.

    • “I still think we’re all in a lot of trouble,” Gayed wrote. “All bubbles end.”

    The market is looking like it’s in the “perfect setup” for investor panic and a coming stock crash, according to one of Wall Street’s most bearish fund managers.

    Michael Gayed, a portfolio manager at Tidal Financial and the author of The Lead-Lag Report, warned that stocks could be at risk of a major correction, thanks to a handful of warning signs that are flashing in the market.

    In an op-ed for InvestorPlace on Thursday, Gayed pointed to the rising price of gold, utility stocks, and long-term Treasury bonds  — three assets investors typically flock to for safety when the market starts to sour.

    “It’s uncommon for these three traditionally defensive asset classes to move in such harmony, and historically, this kind of movement has been a precursor to a broader market shift,” Gayed said. “The defensive asset classes’ unison movement is what matters here, and the fact that it’s happening during a bubble of speculative trading screams that something could be about to break. Be warned.”

    Gayed has warned of a massive bubble forming in stocks for months — in line with other bears on Wall Street, who say that the hype for artificial intelligence is overblown and bound to end badly. Stocks now look like they did prior to the dot-com and 2008 market crashes, top economist David Rosenberg warned in a note earlier this year, pointing to the dominance of mega-cap tech in the S&P 500.

    Gayed warned investors to brace for a potential stock market crash, though he didn’t have an official price target for the year.

    “How the hell is this some bull market when it’s literally the entire world cheering the widening of the wealth gap that’s happening between mega-cap technology stocks and nearly every single other public company in existence,” Gayed said in a February op-ed. “I still think we’re all in a lot of trouble, and time will prove my original analysis (largely) right. All bubbles end.”

    Risk to the downside seems to be lost on investors though, who are still feeling pretty optimistic about the market as they anticipate a soft landing and Fed rate cuts to come later this year.

    Over 50% of investors said they felt bullish on stocks over the next six months, according to the AAII’s latest Investor Sentiment Survey. Meanwhile, over 81% of individual investors said they believed the Dow would end the year higher, suggesting that investors are the most upbeat about the market since 2007, according to a survey maintained by the Yale School of Management.

    Read the original article on Business Insider

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  • Making sense of the markets this week: March 10, 2024 – MoneySense

    Making sense of the markets this week: March 10, 2024 – MoneySense

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    Right now, the U.S. economy is strong. There is no reason to cut interest rates. In my view, this is a win-win situation. If the economy were to falter quickly, the Federal Reserve would cut rates to help businesses. If the economy continues to grow at 3% to 4%—which is the current prediction for the first quarter of 2024 in the U.S.—the central bank won’t have to act. In both cases, the stock market will go up. We’ll see on March 28, when the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis will announce the U.S. 2023 Q4 GDP.

    Bitcoin is skyrocketing thanks to the SEC

    Wow. Just wow. For a brief moment on March 5, 2024, bitcoin recently hit an all-time high slightly above USD$69,200, beating its previous peak of USD$69,010 in November 2021. The cryptocurrency has been rising since October 2023, but prices really started to surge in January after the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) approved bitcoin exchange-traded funds (ETFs). American retail investors have been waiting a long time for a way to invest in cryptocurrency without having to own the digital tokens themselves. Now they can choose from 10 bitcoin ETFs, including funds from investment giants BlackRock and Fidelity. Collectively, the new bitcoin ETFs have already attracted billions of dollars. An ethereum ETF is likely around the corner. (Canadian investors already had access to bitcoin ETFs—Purpose Investment’s bitcoin ETF launched in February 2021, and at least three ethereum ETFs were launched by various Canadian firms a few months later.)

    Source: Wall Street Journal

    For me, this is an asset class that is still speculative. I’m not alone. Executives from Vanguard say they are not offering crypto products because they don’t see an “enduring” role for them in long-term portfolios. SEC chair Gary Gensler made a point of saying the approval of bitcoin ETFs was not an endorsement, and that he views crypto as a “speculative, volatile asset.”

    Right now, there is no government body or country backing digital currencies—at least, not yet. Until this happens, I don’t know where they fit into the economy. My view: At this point, crypto represents too much risk for most investors. It’s certainly not a core holding for the investors I work with.

    Gold also has been rising of late, and I met with David Garofalo of Gold Royalty Corp. about the rise of gold on March 6, 2024.

    TSX significantly underperforming the S&P 500 

    The TSX Composite Index is up just 5% year over year compared to nearly 30% for the S&P 500. Why has the TSX fallen short? Primarily because of which economic sectors it focuses on. Specifically, there is a lack of high-growth technology stocks in Canada. The majority of the TSX is made up of banking, oil and gold stocks. For a while now, banking has been flat at best. Oil stocks have dropped in price. Even though gold is at an all-time high, gold stocks have not fared as well. Meanwhile, 40% of the companies on the S&P 500 are in the technology sector, which led to its strong performance. BMO senior economist Robert Kavcic points out that just “five [tech companies]—Nvidia, Microsoft, Amazon, Meta and Apple—have alone accounted for almost half of the net 1,200 point increase in the S&P 500 over the past year.” More than half the companies on the Nasdaq are also technology stocks. Even the Dow Jones Industrial Average has a growing number of technology stocks, including Apple, Salesforce and Amazon.

    Two tables show S&P 500 and TSX stock index performance as of March 1, 2024
    Source: BMO Global Equity Weekly

    The TSX did very well during the China-driven metals super-cycle, when that country was buying up all the copper, aluminum and iron ore it could to build infrastructure. Those days are over. China’s economy is slowing, and that’s impacting Canadian companies and the TSX. 

    Canada’s economy is the secondary reason the TSX isn’t doing as well as U.S. indexes. Canadian GDP grew by 1% over the last year, while U.S. GDP grew by 3.2%. As a result, Canada is not as attractive to foreign investment as the U.S. We discussed the TSX’s underperformance on the Allan Small Financial Show.

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    Allan Small

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  • Closing This Gap May Be Biden’s Key to a Second Term

    Closing This Gap May Be Biden’s Key to a Second Term

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    Just since last November, the most closely watched measure of consumer confidence about the economy has soared by about 25 percent. That’s among the most rapid improvements recorded in years for the University of Michigan’s Index of Consumer Sentiment, even after a slight decline in the latest figures released yesterday.

    And yet, even as consumer confidence has rebounded since last fall, President Joe Biden’s approval rating has remained virtually unchanged—and negative. Now, as then, a solid 55 percent majority of Americans say they disapprove of his performance as president in the index maintained by FiveThirtyEight, while only about 40 percent approve.

    That divergence between improving attitudes about the economy and stubbornly negative assessments of the president’s performance is compounding the unease of Democratic strategists as they contemplate the impending rematch between Biden and former President Donald Trump. Most Democratic strategists I spoke with believe that brightening views about the economy could still benefit Biden. But many also acknowledge that each month that passes without improvement for Biden raises more questions about whether even growing economic optimism will overcome voters’ doubts about him on other fronts.

    Doug Sosnik, the chief White House political adviser to Bill Clinton during his 1996 reelection, told me that if he was in the White House again today, “I would say I’m not that concerned” about improving economic attitudes not lifting Biden yet, “because this takes time.” But, Sosnik added, “if you come back to me in six weeks or two months and we haven’t seen any movement, then I’d start becoming very concerned.”

    Historically, measures of consumer confidence have been a revealing gauge of an incumbent president’s reelection chances. Presidents Ronald Reagan, Clinton, and Barack Obama, as I’ve written, all saw their job-approval ratings tumble when consumer confidence fell early in their first terms amid widespread unease over the economy. But when the economy revived and consumer confidence improved later in their term, each man’s approval rating rose with it. Riding the wave of those improving attitudes, all three won their reelection campaigns, Reagan in a historic 49-state landslide.

    By contrast, when Presidents Jimmy Carter and George H. W. Bush lost their reelection bids, declining or stagnant consumer confidence was an early augur of their eventual defeat. Collapsing consumer confidence amid the coronavirus pandemic in 2020 also foreshadowed Trump’s defeat, after sustained optimism about the economy had been one of his greatest political strengths during his first three years.

    Polling leaves little doubt that since last fall, more Americans are starting to feel better about the economy. An index of economic attitudes compiled by the Gallup Organization recently reached its highest level since September 2021. Even after the small retreat in the latest numbers, the University of Michigan’s index is now at its highest level since the summer of 2021. A separate consumer-confidence survey conducted by the Conference Board, a business group, also slipped slightly in February but remains higher than its level last fall.

    None of this, though, has yet generated any discernible improvement in Biden’s standing with the public. In fact, the recent Gallup Poll that documented the rise in economic optimism since last October found that Biden’s approval rating over the same period had fallen, from 41 to 38 percent—a single percentage point above the lowest mark Gallup has ever measured for him. The fact that consumer confidence has revived without elevating Biden’s ratings suggests “that impressions of his economic handling have been set and will likely be hard to change as he faces other struggles with perceptions of age and capacity,” the Republican pollster Micah Roberts told me.

    Paul Kellstedt, a political scientist at Texas A&M University, told me that two big structural shifts in public opinion help explain why Biden has not benefited more so far from these green shoots of optimism.

    One, Kellstedt said, is that the relationship is weakening between objective economic trends and consumer confidence. Compared with the days of Reagan or Clinton, more voters in both parties are reluctant to describe even a booming economy in positive terms when the other party holds the White House, Kellstedt noted. Given Biden’s record of overall economic growth and job creation, as well as the dramatic rise in the stock market, the consumer-confidence numbers, though improving, are still lower “than they should be based on objective fundamentals,” he told me.

    Still, optimism about the economy has increased since last fall, not only among Democrats but also among independents and even Republicans, trends that have lifted previous presidents. That points to what Kellstedt calls the second structural challenge facing Biden: The relationship between voters’ attitudes about the economy and their judgments about the president is also weakening.

    Amid these new patterns in public opinion, “a strengthening economy is not going to hurt Biden, of course, but how much it is going to help him is quite uncertain,” Kellstedt told me.

    Political strategists in both parties believe another central reason Biden isn’t benefiting more from the many positive economic trends under his presidency is that so many Americans remain scarred by the biggest exception: the highest inflation in four decades. Although costs aren’t rising nearly as fast as they were earlier in Biden’s presidency, for many essentials, such as food and rent, prices remain much higher than when he took office.

    Jay Campbell, a Democratic pollster who also surveys economic attitudes for CNBC, told me that more than anything else, “what is holding back” Biden from rising is that “it is still well within your memory when you were spending at the grocery store 10 to 20 percent less than you are now.”

    Republicans see a related factor constraining Biden’s potential gains: The baseline that voters are comparing him against is not in the distant past, but what they remember from the Trump presidency before the pandemic. Even though the University of Michigan’s consumer-confidence index and Gallup’s Economic Confidence Index have improved substantially since last year, for instance, in absolute terms they still stand well below their levels during Trump’s first three years. “There’s an alternative economic approach that voters can remember and compare to the years under Bidenomics,” Roberts told me. Jim McLaughlin, a pollster for Trump’s 2024 campaign, told me voters don’t credit Biden for moderating inflation largely because they blame him for causing it in the first place.

    A silver lining in all this for Biden is that, as Kellstedt noted, voters’ judgments about which candidate can better manage the economy don’t determine their preferences in the presidential race as much as they once did. Today, as I’ve written over the years, the two political coalitions are held together more by shared cultural values than by common economic interests.

    As recently as the 2022 election, Democratic House candidates not only carried the small share of voters who described the economy as good, but also won more than three-fifths of the much larger group who called it only fair, according to exit polls. That was primarily because a historically large number of voters down on the economy, and Biden’s performance, nonetheless rejected Republican candidates whom they viewed as a threat to their rights (particularly on abortion), their values, and democracy itself. That same dynamic will undoubtedly help Biden in 2024, particularly among upper-middle-class voters who have felt less strain over inflation, are most likely to be benefiting from the stock market’s surge, and are the most receptive to Democratic charges that Trump will threaten democracy and their personal freedoms.

    But Biden also has plenty of his own vulnerabilities on noneconomic issues. Not only Republicans but also independents give him dismal ratings for his handling of immigration and the border. His expansive support of Israel’s war against Hamas has deeply divided the Democratic coalition. And a broad consensus of voters, now often about 80 percent or more in polls, worry that Biden is too old for another term. If attitudes about the economy continue to mend, and Biden’s approval remains mired, “the stories that will be written is that voters have tuned him out, they’ve made their minds up, he’s too old,” Sosnik told me.

    Trump inspires such intense resistance that Biden, in a rematch, is virtually certain to win more support than any modern president from voters who are pessimistic about the economy. But that doesn’t mean Biden can overcome any deficit to Trump on the economy, no matter how large. And that deficit right now is very large: In national polls released last month by both NBC News and Marquette University Law School, voters trusted Trump over Biden for handling the economy by about 20 percentage points.

    At some point, the strategists I spoke with agree, the economic hole could become too deep to climb from by relying on other issues. (Both the NBC and Marquette polls showed Biden running much closer to Trump in the ballot test than on the economy—but still trailing the former president on the ballot test.) To overtake Trump, Biden likely needs twin dynamics to continue. He needs the slight February pullback evident in the University of Michigan and Conference Board surveys to prove a blip, and the share of Americans satisfied with the economy to continue growing. And then he needs more of those satisfied voters to credit him for the improvement.

    Biden has some powerful arguments he can marshal to sell voters on his economic record. Wages have been rising faster than prices since last spring, particularly for low-income workers. The big three economic bills Biden passed in his first two years have triggered an enormous investment boom in new manufacturing plants for clean energy, electric vehicles, and semiconductors, with the benefits flowing disproportionately toward smaller blue-collar communities largely excluded from the tech-heavy information economy. He can also point to significant legislative achievements that are helping families afford prescription-drug and health-care costs—a potentially powerful calling card, especially with seniors. If the Federal Reserve Board cuts interest rates by this summer—which it has signaled it will do if inflation remains moderate—that could turbocharge the improvement in consumer confidence.

    “There is so much other good news that I feel like there’s a case to be made to people that this president has substantially improved the economy,” Campbell told me. “But whether that ultimately supersedes people’s negativity about [inflation] is a question that I don’t have an answer to.”

    Biden still has time to improve his standing on the economy, but that time isn’t unlimited. Sosnik says history has shown that voters solidify their judgments about a president’s performance in the period between the second half of his third year in office and the first half of his fourth year, about four months from now. President John F. Kennedy, speaking about the economy, famously said, “A rising tide lifts all boats.” The next few months will reveal whether Biden’s has run aground too deeply for that still to apply.

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    Ronald Brownstein

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  • Stock market soars to record highs, fueled by AI optimism

    Stock market soars to record highs, fueled by AI optimism

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    Stock market soars to record highs, fueled by AI optimism – CBS News


    Watch CBS News



    The tech-centric Nasdaq is closing at a new high, driven by enthusiasm for artificial intelligence. This milestone marks its first record peak since 2021.

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  • Making sense of the markets this week: March 3, 2024 – MoneySense

    Making sense of the markets this week: March 3, 2024 – MoneySense

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    Nvidia doesn’t have much room left for multiple expansion when it comes to an increased share price for the stock. After accounting for its incredible earnings day, Nvidia is still trading at a P/E ratio of 66x. Even fellow tech heavyweights Microsoft and Apple are only at 36x and 28x respectively. Consequently, if Nvidia continues its incredible bull run, one would have to believe that the demand for chips will continue to skyrocket and that Nvidia will be able to hold off competitors like AMD and Intel. —K.P.

    RRSPs are not a scam or a rip-off

    With the deadline to contribute to registered retirement savings plan (RRSP) officially passed as of February 29, we wanted to quickly address the becoming prominent idea that RRSPs are some sort of scam.

    We’ve noticed an increasing number of inquiries from friends and family over the last few years that go something along the lines of, “RRSPs are just a rip-off because you have to pay tax on them anyway.”

    Since you’re reading a column called “Making sense of the markets,” you’re probably aware that RRSPs are not in fact an asset. The fact that some Canadians don’t understand is shocking. It’s important to understand precisely what RRSPs are.

    RRSPs are a type of investment account—one that’s registered. It’s a place where you can hold investments, and it has powers that protect investments from taxation. If you think you’re purchasing RRSPs as an asset, then you might have gone to a bad wealth management company. A good financial advisor helps you understand what asset you were investing in. A bad financial advisor will be vague by using phrases such as “invest in RRSPs.” Investment information is often murky so money can be put into whatever high-fee investments (such as mutual funds) they wanted to sell that day. (Need an advisor? Check out MoneySense’s Find A Qualified Advisor tool.)

    Of course, an RRSP doesn’t avoid taxes entirely. It defers tax on the contributed amount from when you relatively earn a lot of money (while working) to when you earn less money (when retired). If you get a tax refund when you contribute or owe less taxes when you contributed to a RRSP, that’s essentially the government saying, “Since you contributed to your RRSP, your taxable income this year is not as high as it would’ve been. So you don’t owe us that money now. Oh, and if you have children, we’ll likely increase your Child Care Benefit cheque, as well.” 

    If you get a refund, then invest it and let all of that money compound in low-fee investments for the next several decades, you’re very likely to be happy with the results. But those people who say “RRSPs are scams” are usually salespeople pedalling life insurance for higher commissions. 

    Yes, for some Canadians investing within a tax-free savings account (TFSA), it means they could come out ahead of investing within an RRSP. Yet, for the vast majority of Canadians, they could end up in a pretty similar place. Don’t forget, if you invest inside a TFSA, you don’t get that tax refund to stuff right back into your investment account—you’re contributing after-tax income. When deciding on a TFSA or an RRSP, you would need to know exactly how much income you and your spouse will have when you retire. 

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    Kyle Prevost

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  • Why investors should buy into an ‘egregiously expensive’ stock market, Bank of America says

    Why investors should buy into an ‘egregiously expensive’ stock market, Bank of America says

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    REUTERS/Dario Cantatore/NYSE Euronext

    • The stock market may be expensive based on traditional measures, but that doesn’t mean investors should avoid stocks.

    • Bank of America said comparing present valuations to the past is comparing apples to oranges.

    • “The S&P 500 is half as levered, is higher quality and has lower earnings volatility than prior decades,” BofA said.


    The stock market “is egregiously expensive” relative to its past, but that doesn’t mean investors should avoid stocks, according to a Wednesday note from Bank of America’s Savita Subramanian.

    The US equity strategist said that while the S&P 500 is “statistically expensive on 19 of 20 metrics and is trading at a 95th percentile price to trailing earnings ratio based on data back to 1900,” it doesn’t mean that stock prices can’t continue to rise from here, and for good reason.

    In particular, Subramanian took issue with comparing current stock market valuations to the past, when the composition of the S&P 500 looked a lot different.

    “I think the one bear case that I hear a lot that I want to try to debunk is just the idea that the market is too expensive,” Subramanian told CNBC on Wednesday. “Folks will take today’s S&P and compare it to 10 years ago, 20 years ago, 30 years ago, 40 years ago. I don’t think that makes sense because the market today is such a different animal.”

    The S&P 500 currently trades at a 12-month trailing price-to-earnings ratio of 24.5x, well above its 10-year average of 21.1x. Meanwhile, the S&P 500’s forward price-to-earnings ratio is 20.4x, more than one standard deviation above its 30-year average of 16.6x.

    But maybe the S&P 500 should trade at a higher valuation than it did 30 years ago when considering that the underlying companies within the S&P 500 are much more profitable today than they were in the past, Subramanian suggests.

    “The S&P 500 is half as levered, is higher quality and has lower earnings volatility than prior decades. The index gradually shifted from 70% asset-intensive manufacturing, financials and real estate companies in 1980 to 50% asset-light Tech & Health Care,” she explained.

    And that different composition shows up in the S&P 500’s profit margins, which have doubled from less than 6% in the 1980s to nearly 12%.

    “We’re in a different ball game here so you can’t just look at the S&P today and take that P/E and compare it over time,” Subramanian told CNBC.

    All in, despite the historically high market valuations, stock prices will likely continue trending higher as long as corporate earnings don’t plummet from their current levels.

    “This realistic good case scenario suggests a fair value for the S&P 500 of ~5500,” Subramanian said, representing potential upside of 9% from current levels.

    Read the original article on Business Insider

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  • Making sense of the markets this week: February 25, 2024 – MoneySense

    Making sense of the markets this week: February 25, 2024 – MoneySense

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    Retail earnings highlights

    All numbers below are in U.S. dollars.

    • Walmart (WMT/NYSE): Earnings per share of $1.80 (versus $1.65 predicted). Revenue of $173.39 billion (versus $170.71 billion predicted).

    • Home Depot (HD/NYSE): Earnings per share of $2.82 (versus $2.77 predicted). Revenue of $34.79 billion (versus $34.64 billion predicted).

    Walmart continued to show why it deserves its best-in-class status for mass retailers. Quarterly revenue was up 6% and e-commerce sales were up a massive 23%. No doubt shareholders were excited about the 9% dividend raise the company announced.

    The big news from “the big blue retailer,” a.k.a. Walmart, was that it’s buying TV manufacturer Vizio for $2.3 billion. The move makes sense given how many Vizio TVs Walmart sells. The company pointed out that the acquisition would be a major boost for its advertising business, as it could now better track customer data. Look forward to massive Black Friday Vizio sales for years to come.

    “Our market is on its way back to normal demand conditions. We’re not quite there yet, but the pressures we saw in 2023 are receding.”

    —Richard McPhail, Walmart CFO

    Home Depot announced that its sales were down about 3% from 2022’s fourth quarter, but that was significantly less of a pullback than it had been expecting, given the current high interest rate environment.

    Canadian earnings: who needs profits anyway?

    Sometimes you have to wonder if the analysts who predict quarterly earnings know what they’re talking about. Take Nutrien, Suncor and Loblaw, which all reported their earnings. Loblaw’s quarter was predictably boring, and the stock moved up slightly, score one for the analysts. However, Nutrien came in way below earnings expectations, yet the stock went up 7%. Suncor on the other hand had a great earnings report, but shares were down slightly on the day.

    Canadian earnings highlights

    Here are the numbers released this week. Note: Nutrien is a Canadian company based in Saskatoon, but trades on the New York Stock Exchange and reports in U.S. dollars.

    • Suncor Energy Inc. (SU/TSX): Earnings per share of $1.26 (versus $1.07 predicted). Revenue of $14.14 billion (versus $12.69 billion predicted).
    • Nutrien (NTR/TSX, NYSE): Earnings per share of USD$0.37 (versus $0.65 predicted). Revenue of USD$5.40 billion (versus $5.20 billion predicted).
    • Loblaw (L/TSX): Earnings per share of $2.00 (versus $1.90 predicted). Revenue of $14.53 billion (versus $14.53 billion predicted).

    Analysts usually point to anticipated forward guidance being the key in instances like this. So, because the future doesn’t look great for oil prices (recessions, supply increases, etc.) and Nutrien believes potash demand will increase going forward, the stock market is looking ahead and not simply reacting to last quarter’s news.

    Nutrien shareholders definitely miss the days of sanctions crippling the supply of Russian potash to the market, despite the bump on Thursday. The fourth quarter price was USD$235 per tonne, compared to USD$526 per tonne a year earlier.

    In more positive news, Nutrien’s CEO Ken Seitz said, “We do see potential for firming of potash prices,” and went on to add that Red Sea logistics issues were likely to continue to add to cost pressures for the foreseeable future.

    Suncor announced that it had set a new oilsands production record at 757,400 barrels per day, however, profit margins were down on lower oil prices. The oil giant also announced it would be bringing in a familiar corporate face as its next board chair, as Russ Girling (former CEO of TC Energy Corp) would be taking over fromMichael Wilson.

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    Kyle Prevost

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  • Nvidia earnings will put an entire stock market meme to the test. Again.

    Nvidia earnings will put an entire stock market meme to the test. Again.

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    Nvidia (NVDA) is at the center of a new meme stock rally.

    Its earnings report on Wednesday will put that theme to the test. Again.

    Wedbush analyst Dan Ives, the most creative voice on Wall Street today, marrying a dramatic flair with a prescient, unabashed bullishness on AI’s investment case, called Nvidia’s quarterly results from last May a “jaw dropping” event.

    “The Street was all awaiting last night’s Nvidia quarter and guidance to gauge the magnitude of this AI demand story with many skeptics saying an AI bubble was forming and instead Jensen & Co. delivered guidance for the ages,” Ives wrote at the time

    And Ives was only just getting started.

    In August, Nvidia’s increased revenue forecast was a “drop the mic” moment for the company, in Ives’ view.

    By November, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang had been crowned by Ives as the “Godfather of AI” after the company once again raised its sales forecast. Ives added the company’s November outlook was “guidance heard around the world as the AI Revolution is accelerating into 2024 for the broader tech sector.”

    Three months later, and what do we have in the market? Anything and everything with an AI play catching a bid while Nvidia has become the third-largest company in the market.

    On Wednesday, for instance, the chip giant disclosed modest stock investments in Arm Holdings (ARM), SoundHound AI (SOUN), and biotech company Recursion Pharmaceuticals (RXRX).

    Shares of all three rallied on Thursday following the news, most notably SoundHound, which gained 60% on news Nvidia owned about 1.5% of the company’s outstanding shares as of Dec. 31.

    Add to this the recent action seen in Arm stock, and the rally in cloud storage play Super Micro Computer (SMCI) — which saw its stock gain about 200% in a month and nearly 1000% over the last 12 months, before pulling back on Friday — and we can see that a bona fide AI craze has broken out in the stock market. One in which the mere suggestion that a company could be set to benefit from accelerating AI-related spending is enough to bid shares higher.

    Now, the notion that an AI-fueled market rally is hanging by a thread only Nvidia can sew on tightly is far from a novel idea, as Ives noted in his May 2023 report. And so perhaps it is our error to see this week’s results from Nvidia as holding much significance beyond the fortunes of Nvidia itself.

    Moreover, the corporate earnings outlook that can backstop a rally growing beyond AI continues to improve. Meanwhile, the number of times corporate executives have brought up AI on earnings calls of late has actually been on the decline.

    And unlike the meme stock rally of 2021 — in which fundamental stories were haphazardly retrofitted to explain why a stock might double or triple in a few trading days — the enthusiasm for AI plays is based on a firmer foundation of actual corporate spending.

    But with the locus of that investment found on Nvidia’s income statement, it’s hard to shake the feeling that these results will mean something bigger for the stock market rally. Even if we’ve seen this film before.

    Click here for the latest stock market news and in-depth analysis, including events that move stocks

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  • Making sense of the markets this week: February 18, 2024 – MoneySense

    Making sense of the markets this week: February 18, 2024 – MoneySense

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    Shopify struggles

    Canada’s second-largest company (or third, depending on the day) had a relatively strong earnings day on Tuesday, but the company’s share price took a beating based mostly on decreased earnings expectations going forward.

    Shopify earnings highlights

    Shopify is listed on both the Toronto and New York Stock exchanges, and it announces earnings in U.S. dollars.

    • Shopify (SHOP/TSX): Earnings per share of $0.34 (versus $0.31 predicted), and revenues of $2.14 (versus $2.08 predicted).

    Shares of Canada’s tech darling were down over 13% on Tuesday, but even with the massive pullback, the share price is still up 14% year to date (YTD).

    Shopify’s CFO Jeff Hoffmeister reported the good news that more products were sold on the Shopify platform than ever before. The fourth quarter included the all-important holiday shopping activity, and Hoffmeister announced that Shopify has moved $75.1 billion-worth of merchandise. That was a 23% increase on last year’s numbers. Net earnings came in at $657 million, compared to a loss of $623 million during the fourth quarter in 2022.

    President Harley Finkelstein said Shopify handled the orders for 61 million customers worldwide on the Black Friday weekend. 

    “Our platform handled a staggering 967,000 requests per second, which is the same as 58 million requests per minute, nearly 80% higher than our peak traffic just two years ago.”

    —Harley Finkelstein

    So, where’s the struggle? Growth is not the same as profitability. With Shopify stating its free cash flow is going to be substantially lower than previously indicated, investors were quick to pounce on the bad news.

    Finkelstein tried his best to put a positive spin on future growth opportunities.

     “There are opportunities for us to go beyond Europe. Of course, we’ve talked about Latin America and the Asia-Pacific in the past, but we definitely see a lot of opportunity there[…] I mean, we’ve captured less than 1% of market share in global retail sales, even as our product and geographies have expanded.”

    There’s no question Shopify’s been an incredibly innovative company, and it is all the more noteworthy for keeping its home base in Canada, despite many tech companies moving shop. It’s very likely the company will be consistently profitable, but trying to forecast the “when” and the “how much” of that long-term profitability is a very difficult endeavour. In this age of higher-for-longer interest rates, investors appear to be demanding durable profits sooner rather than later, and consequently, shareholders will have to buckle up for a bit of a volatile rollercoaster.

    Can Shopify keep up the growth momentum while controlling costs? Investors are betting on it. But Tuesday’s dip would indicate that it’s not at all certain about those bets.

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  • Stocks are in a bubble that will keep inflating until 2025 and push the market 30% higher, research firm says

    Stocks are in a bubble that will keep inflating until 2025 and push the market 30% higher, research firm says

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    The stock market is in a bubble, but it can keep growing.Johannes Eisele/AFP via Getty Images

    • The stock market is in a bubble, but that doesn’t mean investors should sell their stocks right now.

    • The S&P 500 still has 30% upside between now and the end of 2025, according to Capital Economics.

    • “Our end-2025 forecast of 6,500 for the index is premised on its valuation reaching a similar level to its peak during the dot com mania,” Capital Economics said.


    The stock market is in a bubble, but that doesn’t mean investors should sell their stocks right now, according to a Monday note from Capital Economics chief markets economist John Higgins.

    In fact, based on current valuations there is considerable upside for the stock market between now and the end of 2025, according to Higgins.

    “We are sticking to our view that this [stock market bubble] will inflate through the end of next year. Our end-2025 forecast of 6,500 for the index is premised on its valuation reaching a similar level to its peak during the dot com mania,” Higgins said.

    Based on current levels, the stock market would have to surge about 30% to reach Higgins’s 2025 year-end price target. Higgins also has a 2024 year-end price target of 5,500, representing a potential upside of 10% from today’s levels and the most bullish forecast on Wall Street.

    Both today’s stock market bubble and the dot-com internet bubble of 2000 revolved around the potential economic benefits of a transformative technology. Decades ago it was the advent of the internet, and today it’s generative artificial intelligence.

    The S&P 500’s forward price-to-earnings ratio stands at about 20x right now, which is below the 25x peak it reached during the dot-com bubble. That suggests there’s still plenty of upside to be had as long as the narrative around artificial intelligence continues to build.

    But valuations have historically proven to be a terrible timing tool for investors, and there’s no telling where valuations might peak this time around, as bubbles in the stock market don’t always follow the same exact roadmap.

    “It [is] impossible to know how quickly a bubble will inflate; how big it will get before it bursts; what will cause it to burst; and when it will burst. Nonetheless, our end-2025 and end-2026 forecasts for the S&P 500 are rooted in the idea that a bubble in the index will continue to inflate in the meantime against the backdrop of a modest rise in forward twelve month EPS,” Higgins concluded.

    Read the original article on Business Insider

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  • The stock market is looking a lot like it did before the dot-com and ’08 crashes, top economist says

    The stock market is looking a lot like it did before the dot-com and ’08 crashes, top economist says

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    Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange October 13, 2008. REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton

    • The stock market looks similar to the periods that preceded the dot-com and 2008 market events.

    • David Rosenberg pointed to the exuberance for AI, which has sparked a “raging bull market.”

    • The “speculative mania” carrying the stock market could soon end, he warned.

    The stock market is flashing the same warning signs of “speculative mania” that preceded the crashes of 2008 and 2000, according to economist David Rosenberg.

    The Rosenberg Research president — who called the 2008 recession and who’s been a vocal bear on Wall Street amid the latest market rally — pointed to the “raging bull market” that’s taken off in stocks, with the S&P 500 surpassing the 5,000 mark for the first time ever last week.

    The benchmark index has soared around 22% from its low in October last year, clearing the official threshold for a bull market. The index has also gained for the last five weeks and has been up for 14 of the last 15 weeks — a winning streak that hasn’t been seen since the early 1970s.

    But the stellar gains are a double-edged sword for investors, as the market looks dangerously similar to the environment prior to the dot-com and 2008 crashes, Rosenberg wrote in a note on Monday.

    “With each passing day, this has the feel of being a cross between 1999 and 2007. It is a gigantic speculative price bubble across most risk assets, and while AI is real, so was the Internet, and so were the high-flying stocks that populated the Nifty Fifty era,” he said, referring to the group of 50 large-cap stocks that dominated the stock market in the 60s and 70s, before falling by around 60%

    Other Wall Street strategists have warned of the parallels between today’s market and similar stock booms in the past. The hype for artificial intelligence pushed the Magnificent Seven stocks to dominate most of the S&P 500’s gains last year, and a major price correction is on the way as valuations soar to unsustainable levels, Richard Bernstein Advisors said in an October 2023 note.

    “This is the problem when a  group of mega cap ‘concept’ stocks trade at double the multiple of the rest of the market. The lesson is that (i) the higher they are, the harder they fall, and (ii) there are dangers when too much growth gets priced in,” Rosenberg said. “Being real in an economic sense does not mean we have not entered a realm of excessive exuberance when it comes to the financial markets,” he added, referring to the hype surrounding AI.

    The outlook for stocks is also shadowed by an uncertain economic picture. Geopolitical risks, recession risk, and the risk that the Fed will disappoint investors hoping for rate cuts aren’t being priced into markets at the moment, Rosenberg added.

    “I don’t find speculative manias a turn-on and in my personal finances, I avoid them like the plague. Not everyone likes to hear that, especially since I missed so much of this rally but that’s how I roll,” he said.

    Rosenberg has warned investors to tread carefully before, given the slew of risks he sees ahead for markets. Previously, he said that the S&P 500 looked “eerily similar” to 2022, the year the index plunged 20%. That’s partly because a recession that “few see and few are positioned for” is coming for the economy, he wrote in a post on LinkedIn last month.

    Read the original article on Business Insider

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  • Making sense of the markets this week: February 11, 2024 – MoneySense

    Making sense of the markets this week: February 11, 2024 – MoneySense

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    Disney is back on track

    Even with all the iconic brands under its corporate umbrella, Disney has struggled the last few years, as its share price is down 11% since February 2019.

    Things might be looking up now that CEO-extraordinaire Bob Iger is back in the captain’s seat after “retiring” back in 2020.

    Disney earnings highlights

    All earnings and revenues for Disney, PayPal, McDonalds, and Eli Lilly below are in U.S. dollars.

    • Disney (DIS/NYSE): Earnings per share of $1.22 (versus $0.99 predicted), and revenues of $23.55 billion (versus $23.64 billion predicted). 

    Disney shares were up over 7% in extended trading on Wednesday after the earnings call. And the call highlighted the following reasons for increased profit guidance in 2024:

    • Disney will meet or surpass its goal of cutting costs by $7.5 billion this year.
    • The House of Mouse company will also invest $1.5 billion into a partnership with game software developer Epic Games.
    • Disney’s “experiences” division (think theme parks and cruises) saw a 7% increase in revenues versus last year. 

    Yet, the biggest Disney revelation this week came from its sports streaming division.

    With Amazon trying live football broadcasts this year, it appears the more traditional names in media have decided to fight back. 

    Disney (through its ESPN subsidiary), Fox and Warner Bros. Discovery announced joining forces to create a new sports streaming service. The planned platform has yet to be named, but it would feature current sports programming from ESPN, ESPN2, ESPNU, SECN, ACCN, ESPNEWS, TNT, TBS, TruTV, FS1, FS2, BTN, UFC, as well as the main ABC and Fox broadcasts. 

    Iger stated, “The launch of this new streaming sports service is a significant moment for Disney and ESPN, a major win for sports fans and an important step forward for the media business.”

    When you think about the possibilities of bundling a new live sports service with current Disney+, Hulu, and Max (the HBO streamer), you will have re-created a substantial amount of the old American cable bundle, plus streaming of classic movies and TV shows. Now, all we need to know is the price, and if and when it would be made available to Canadians.

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  • Xi’s Markets Shakeup Surprised Insiders, Showing Alarm Over Rout

    Xi’s Markets Shakeup Surprised Insiders, Showing Alarm Over Rout

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    (Bloomberg) — Staffers at China’s main securities regulator had been working around the clock for weeks on ways to prop up the nation’s tumbling stock market when the bombshell dropped.

    Most Read from Bloomberg

    Late Wednesday, the official Xinhua News Agency reported that their boss Yi Huiman had been ousted, becoming the biggest Communist Party casualty of a $5 trillion selloff that’s undermining confidence in the fragile economy.

    The announcement sent shockwaves across the industry and within the China Securities Regulatory Commission, according to people familiar with the matter, who asked not to be identified discussing private information. Prior to the Xinhua news, there had been no internal announcement from the Communist Party’s organization department, which typically shares key personnel changes internally before they go public, the people said.

    The departure of Yi, a surprise to even high-ranking CSRC officials, underscores the growing sense of alarm within President Xi Jinping’s government over the speed and scope of the market meltdown that’s now entering its fourth year. Wu Qing, a close ally of Premier Li Qiang, is taking over as chairman of the regulator.

    The CSRC didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.

    China watchers say the move may signal additional measures to revive the world’s second-largest stock market. An earlier flurry of support in the runup to the Lunar New Year holiday, when exchanges are closed for six days beginning Friday, had failed to restore investor confidence.

    “This is long overdue in my opinion, if one chief cannot do the job, then maybe we should give someone else a chance,” said Jiang Liangqing, managing director at Zhuhai Greenbamboo Private Fund Management. “At the minimum, a new broom sweeps clean and he could be more bold in taking action instead of just words.”

    Anticipation of more fulsome efforts to end the rout had been mounting for days, after Bloomberg News reported that regulators led by the CSRC planned to brief President Xi on the markets as soon as Tuesday. There’s been no public disclosure yet on whether Xi had that briefing. It was not known what role Yi had, if any, in that planned briefing.

    China’s latest measures, including curbs on short-selling and purchases by state-owned entities, had some effect this week as the main equity gauge jumped three straight sessions to pare declines for the year. China’s “national team” bought about 70 billion yuan ($9.7 billion) in shares over the past month, Goldman Sachs Group Inc. estimated in a report Monday. At least 200 billion yuan is needed to stabilize the market, according to the US bank.

    “Government buying might help circuit-break the downward spiral, but we think reforms, policy consistency, and plans to address structural macro headwinds are required to re-rate China equity,” the Goldman analysts wrote.

    Read more: Everything China Is Doing to Rescue Its Battered Stock Market

    If history is any guide, more gains may be afoot. The past two sackings of CSRC chiefs heralded extended equity rallies. The benchmark CSI 300 Index rose more than 40% in almost a two-year span after Liu Shiyu replaced Xiao Gang in 2016. The gauge jumped more than 80% over two years after Liu was ousted for Yi in 2019.

    Major market interventions in China have rarely been smooth, however. And the country’s economy is facing bigger challenges than during previous market slumps: The property crisis shows no sign of ending, geopolitical tensions with the US continue to simmer and foreign investors are wary of a government that has clamped down on private enterprise.

    What’s more, the CSRC is constrained by what it can do to turn markets around, notes 22V Research analyst Michael Hirson. It can’t command an intervention by the “national team” or launch some kind of stabilization fund, and can do little on its own to drive economic growth.

    “Changing the chairmanship at the CSRC alone does not change anything fundamentally,” said Yan Wang, chief China strategist at Alpine Macro in Montreal. “The stock market performance is a reflection of weak growth and poor confidence. Unless Beijing addresses these issues, the stock market will likely continue to struggle.”

    The tall task now rests with Wu, 58, who had been tipped last year to take over the CSRC before he was promoted to deputy party secretary for Shanghai. Before that, he worked closely with Premier Li — President’s Xi’s top deputy — who was previously party secretary in the nation’s financial capital.

    Read more: ‘Broker Butcher’ Set to Be China’s Top Securities Regulator

    Wu is well connected in China’s halls of power. He earlier headed the Shanghai Stock Exchange for almost two years and held various roles at the CSRC, earning him the nickname “broker butcher” after shuttering 31 firms over regulation breaches. He then oversaw the fund industry until 2010.

    Wu also worked at the national planning committee, which later morphed into the National Development and Reform Commission. Wu, who holds a PhD in economics from the Renmin University of China, is known as a low-key technocrat who has zero tolerance for wrongdoing, a person familiar with him has said. Wu sometimes jokes he’s more fit to be a surgeon, the person said.

    “Wu’s background in financial regulation suggests he might do a better job in cracking down on malicious short selling and illicit behaviors in the market,” said Sun Jianbo, president of China Vision Capital. “While that’ll soothe investor nerves in the short term by cultivating a more favorable environment, it requires more policy efforts.”

    –With assistance from April Ma, John Cheng and Jacob Gu.

    Most Read from Bloomberg Businessweek

    ©2024 Bloomberg L.P.

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  • Since the pandemic, one age group has seen its wealth surge: Americans under 40

    Since the pandemic, one age group has seen its wealth surge: Americans under 40

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    In the years since the pandemic, many Americans have enjoyed a wealth boost, thanks to a booming stock market and a rise in housing values. But one group far outperformed other demographics during the past five years: workers under 40. 

    The wealth of Americans between the ages of 18 to 39 has jumped by 80% since 2019, compared with a 10% increase for those between 40 to 54 and 30% for people over 55, according to a new analysis from the Federal Bank of New York.

    Younger workers likely saw their assets grow so sharply because they invest more heavily in equities and mutual funds than older Americans, who typically shift their investments away from stocks and into less volatile assets as they get closer to retirement, the analysis shows.

    People under 40 are also the poorest among the nation’s generations, which means they received more stimulus funding during the pandemic, the researchers noted. Some of those young workers put their stimulus checks into the stock market, some researchers have found

    That likely helped juice this group’s wealth during the past few years. The stock market has shown strong performance since January 2019 (excepting the bear market of 2022), with the S&P 500 more than doubling during that time. 

    “The under-40 group experienced a much greater increase in equity portfolio share than the older groups did; this increased exposure to equities — the fastest-growing financial asset class during the period — enabled younger adults to record higher growth in both financial assets and overall wealth,” NY Fed researchers Rajashri Chakrabarti, Natalia Emanuel and Ben Lahey wrote in a blog post about the analysis.

    At the start of 2019, people under 40 collectively held about $5.1 trillion in wealth, the analysis found. By July 2023, that number had jumped to $8.9 trillion. 

    The findings echo the Federal Reserve’s Survey of Consumer Finances, which in October noted that people under 35 years old saw their median net worth more than double to $39,000 in 2022 from $16,000 in 2019. The New York Fed data didn’t include wealth on a per-person basis.

    Most wealth still held by older Americans

    But even with those gains, the under-40 crowd still holds a fraction of the nation’s overall wealth, the researchers pointed out.

    At the start of the pandemic, younger Americans held about 4.9% of the nation’s wealth, even though people under 40 comprise about 37% of the population. Even after their 80% surge in wealth, younger workers still are trailing far behind older Americans, the data shows, the researchers noted.

    For instance, people over 55 controlled about $74.5 trillion in wealth at the start of 2019. By July 2023, that percentage jumped 30% — to $97.3 trillion, or more than 10 times the wealth held by people under 40.

    Even middle-aged Americans, whose asset growth lagged that of both older and younger workers during the pandemic, remain far wealthier than people under 40, the data shows. Workers between 40 to 54 controlled about $24.5 trillion in wealth in early 2019, an amount that rose about 10% to $27.3 trillion in July 2023.

    Racial wealth gaps worsened 

    In a related analysis published Wednesday, the New York Fed found that the racial wealth gap has worsened since 2019.

    White households held about 92.4% of U.S. wealth at the start of 2019, compared with 2.7% for Hispanic households and 4.9% for Black families, the analysis noted.

    During the pandemic, White families saw their wealth jump by about 28%, while the assets of Hispanic families rose about 20% in value. Black households, meanwhile, saw a reduction in wealth during the past five years, with assets losing about 1.5% of their value. 

    The reason could be tied to the types of investments that are most likely to be held by these different groups, the researchers noted. For instance, more than half of financial wealth for Black families is held in pensions, either traditional pensions or 401(k)s and other defined contribution plans. 

    White families are more likely to invest in equities, mutual funds and businesses, they noted. Because equities performed strongly during the pandemic, those households may have seen a lift from their investment mix. 

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  • Make Informed Investment Decisions With Lifetime Access to Tykr for $119.99 | Entrepreneur

    Make Informed Investment Decisions With Lifetime Access to Tykr for $119.99 | Entrepreneur

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    Disclosure: Our goal is to feature products and services that we think you’ll find interesting and useful. If you purchase them, Entrepreneur may get a small share of the revenue from the sale from our commerce partners.

    Every entrepreneur knows that success lies in smart investments. Yet, navigating the financial markets can be a daunting task. Recognizing this, the creators of the Tykr Stock Screener developed a premium product aimed at simplifying this process for both the seasoned investors and those scooping up stocks for the first time. Not just a tool, this invaluable platform also serves as a mentor, guiding users towards safer and more lucrative investment decisions.

    So, what makes Tykr an indispensable financial adviser in your pocket? Starting with the initial steps it shields you from common rookie mistakes: stepping into high-risk moves and heartbreaking losses. Its highly efficient algorithm sifts through a universe of over 30,000 U.S. and International stocks, swiftly recognizing the ones with promising return prospects. It takes users behind the scenes, explaining the “why” behind every recommendation, thereby nurturing an understanding of the market dynamics.

    For those of you embracing a cautious investment strategy, Tykr’s exclusive score feature adds an extra layer of security. It rates stocks out of 20, offering a clear insight into a stock’s financial strength. Knowing the Margin of Safety (MOS), an indicator of potential returns, further equips you to take calculated risks. Who said the stock market was all about gambling?

    Finding robust investments takes no more than 30 seconds, even for first timers navigating the platform. The seemingly complex world of stock trading is simplified to three categories: On Sale (potential buy), Watch, Overpriced (potential sell). Sorting your investment priorities becomes as straightforward as categorizing your emails.

    Tykr has proven itself an indispensable tool for seasoned and novice investors alike looking to secure their financial future.

    Recognized as a vital investment tool, its user-friendly interface and insightful algorithm are key to making smarter financial decisions.

    For a limited time, score a lifetime subscription to a Tykr Stock Screener Premium plan for $119.99.

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  • Making sense of the markets this week: February 4, 2024 – MoneySense

    Making sense of the markets this week: February 4, 2024 – MoneySense

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    Facebook thrives—the rest of tech, not so much

    While all four of the tech titans that announced quarterly earnings this week managed to beat their predicted earnings and revenue targets, only Facebook announced earnings that really got investors excited.

    Big tech earnings highlights

    All numbers below are in U.S. currency.

    • Microsoft (MSFT/NASDAQ): Earnings per share of $2.93 (versus expected of $2.78) and revenues of $62.02 billion (versus $61.12 billion predicted).
    • Alphabet (GOOGL/NASDAQ): Earnings per share of $1.64 (versus expected of $1.59) and revenues of $86.31 billion (versus $85.33 billion predicted).
    • Meta (META/NASDAQ): Earnings per share of $5.33 (versus $4.96 predicted) and revenues of $40.1 billion (versus $39.18 billion predicted). 
    • Apple (AAPL/NASDAQ): Earnings per share of $2.18 (versus $2.10 predicted) and revenue of $119.58 billion (versus $117.91 billion predicted).
    Source: CNBC

    With Meta, often referred to as Facebook, announcing excellent ad revenue growth, decreased expenses, and even introducing its first-ever dividend ($0.50 a share, paid in March), it was no surprise to see share prices pop in after-hours trading on Thursday. That said, the 14% surge (on top of a 12% year-to-date gain) caps off an incredible run for Facebook that has seen the share price quadruple since November 2022. This good news comes despite the virtual reality unit at Facebook losing $4.65 billion this quarter (which is about what the entire company of Air Canada is worth as a comparison).

    When Microsoft and Alphabet released earnings on Tuesday, it was puzzling to see the solid earnings results lead to substantial drops in share prices for both companies. This price movement was likely due to sky-high expectations that led to outsized price run-ups in 2023 and the first month of 2024. 

    Considering that bigger picture is important, as Microsoft is still up over 7% year to date, and Google (despite an 8% loss on Wednesday) is up nearly 2% so far in 2024.

    Both Google and Microsoft announced that their cloud computing services were large growth vectors, and that layoffs were in the works in the name of cost-cutting and efficiency.

    Apple had similar earnings results to Google and Microsoft, as they beat their earnings projections but share prices were down 4% in after hours trading on Thursday, as several red flags were apparent in their quarterly earnings numbers. Most notably, a 13% sales decrease in China, and decreased revenue guidance for iPhones going forward. The stock is basically flat year-to-date.

    CP and Brookfield keep a steady hand on the profit tiller

    On our side of the border this week, the notable earnings calls included Brookfield Infrastructure and CP Rail.

    Canadian earnings highlights

    All figures in Canadian dollars, unless otherwise stated.

    • Brookfield Infrastructure Corp (BIP/TSX): Earnings per share came in at a loss of USD$0.20 (versus positive USD$0.11 predicted) and revenues were USD$4.97 billion (versus USD$2.03 billion predicted).
    • Canadian Pacific Kansas City Ltd. (CP/TSX): Earnings per share came in at $1.18 (versus $1.12 predicted) and revenues were $3.78 billion (versus $3.68 billion predicted).

    Before you get too worried about those wonky results from Brookfield, keep in mind that their reported numbers are often quite complicated to make sense out of due to their unique corporate structure and accounting practices. Given that the massive infrastructure conglomerate is often buying and selling large utilities, its quarterly numbers can look misleading. In this instance, the market took the news in stride, as BIP was up over 1% on the day.

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  • Five Big Tech companies with combined market value of over $10 trillion to report earnings this week

    Five Big Tech companies with combined market value of over $10 trillion to report earnings this week

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    Investors wondering where the S&P 500 is headed, at least for the next month or so, will want to pay attention to three key days this week.

    Between Tuesday and Thursday, five Big Tech companies with a combined market value of more than $10 trillion will report earnings: Microsoft Corp., Alphabet Inc., Meta Platforms Inc., Amazon.com Inc. and Apple Inc. Meanwhile, the Federal Reserve will issue its decision on interest rates, followed by Chair Jerome Powell’s press conference where he’s expected to discuss the outlook ahead.

    The stakes couldn’t be much higher, with the S&P 500 Index pushing deeper into record territory on bets that central bankers are poised to began easing monetary policies and tech behemoths like Microsoft getting more valuable by the day.

    “Tech disproportionately moved the market last year and big tech continues to have the biggest earnings power, so the results will be crucial for the markets,” said Chris Zaccarelli, chief investment officer at Independent Advisor Alliance.

    After a shaky start to the year, the S&P 500 is rising again and on pace for a third monthly advance that’s added more than 18% since late October, when the index hit a near-term low before Fed officials started signaling that rate hikes were over. 

    The rally is again being led by megacaps including Microsoft, Alphabet, Amazon.com, Nvidia and Meta Platforms, which were responsible for a majority of the index’s 24% gain last year as investors became captivated by the possibilities of artificial intelligence services. The so-called Magnificent Seven, which also includes Tesla Inc., just hit a record 29% of the S&P 500 despite a slump in shares of the electric-vehicle maker that’s erased more than $200 billion in market value just this month.

    AI Booming

    Microsoft and Alphabet will kick off earnings on Tuesday after markets close. The two companies are among the best positioned to benefit from the AI boom after investing heavily in the field for years. Microsoft has been adding the features to its suite of software products, and investors are betting that AI will soon start boosting profit and sales growth.

    On Wednesday, the focus shifts to the end of the Fed’s January meeting, where it’s expected to hold interest rates steady for a fourth-consecutive meeting. Traders will be primarily focused on what Powell and other policymakers have to say about the timing of easing. Recent data showing inflation continuing to recede and resilient US economic growth suggest central bankers won’t be in a hurry to cut interest rates.

    Apple is the biggest draw on Thursday, when Amazon and Facebook-owner Meta Platforms also report in the afternoon. The iPhone maker has been dogged by concerns about revenue growth and is expected to report its first sales expansion in four quarters.

    Read more: Apple veteran instrumental to iPhone development leaves for electric-vehicle maker Rivian: ‘Now is the time for me to move on’

    With most of the megacaps in record territory, there are concerns that investors are over exposed to just a handful of stocks, which could open the door for some pain if quarterly results underwhelm.

    The Magnificent Seven stocks were again named the most crowded trade in a Bank of America survey of fund managers, according to a research note published by the bank last week.

    No Protection

    Still, traders aren’t rushing to scoop up hedges against declines, according to options market data.

    A gauge of projected price swings in Apple in the next three months is hovering near the lowest level in six years. Traders expect a 3.3% move in the stock in either direction a day after the results, which would be among the narrowest post-earnings swings in two years.

    Projected three-month volatility in Meta Platforms, which more than quadrupled since its November 2022 nadir, is at the lowest in two years. The cost of protection against a 10% decline in Microsoft in the next month is hovering near the lowest level since August relative to the cost of options that profit from a similar rally.

    Tesla demonstrated the risks last week after missing fourth-quarter earnings estimates and warning that its sales growth would be “notably lower” in 2024. The stock tumbled 12% the following day, its biggest drop in a year.

    Microsoft recently overtook Apple as the world’s most valuable company with a market value above $3 trillion. The rally has made the stock even more expensive, at 33 times profits projected over the next 12 months compared with an average of 24 times over the past decade.

    To Jason Benowitz, senior portfolio manager at CI Roosevelt, there’s no doubt the megacap trade is crowded. But that doesn’t mean the stocks can’t continue to rally with economic growth slowing and easing financial conditions.

    “There’s a good reason for the crowded trade,” he said. “The environment is good for them.”

    Subscribe to the Eye on AI newsletter to stay abreast of how AI is shaping the future of business. Sign up for free.

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  • Making sense of the markets this week: January 28, 2024 – MoneySense

    Making sense of the markets this week: January 28, 2024 – MoneySense

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    As their shareholders expected, Johnson & Johnson and Procter & Gamble had solid, if unspectacular, earnings reporting days. These companies aren’t strangers to predictable growth, as J&J and P&G have raised their dividend payout for 61 and 67 consecutive years, respectively.

    GE shares were more or less flat, despite the earnings beat, as shareholders await the results of the company breakup. The plan is to break away both GE’s aerospace and energy divisions into their own companies.

    CNR keeps profits on the right track

    Canadian National Railway (CNR/TSX) announced earnings per share of $2.02 (versus $1.98 predicted) and revenue of $4.47 billion (versus $4.38 predicted) on Tuesday. Share prices were up slightly on this news. Shareholders appear to largely agree with management’s prediction that increased Canadian economic activity in the second half of the year will lead to a profit boost.

    Gross ton miles (GTM) came in at 118,687 million versus 118,272.3 million estimated by analysts. 

    Management painted a very positive picture when it came to future projections. CNR chief executive officer Tracy Robinson stated, “Through 2023, our team of dedicated railroaders leveraged our scheduled operating model to deliver exceptional service for our customers and remained resilient in the face of numerous external challenges. Looking forward, we are optimistic as CN-specific growth initiatives are producing volumes. While economic uncertainty persists, we have the momentum to deliver sustainable profitable growth in 2024.”

    The current guidance for management states that 2024 will see a 10% increase in earnings per share, with record revenues from potash, refund petroleum and propane. International volume is back to pre-pandemic levels, fully recovering from the British Columbia dockworkers’ strike last summer. For more details on CNR, please check my article on Canadian railway stocks at MillionDollarJourney.ca.

    Bank of Canada HODLs—ahem, hangs on for dear life

    As most economy experts predicted, the Bank of Canada (BoC) decided to hold the policy interest rate steady at 5% this week. It was the fourth consecutive time the BoC has decided not to increase or decrease the rate. There appears to be a growing consensus that the Bank will be forced to cut rates in April or March, but BoC governor Tiff Macklem did hedge everyone’s bets by stating that the BoC isn’t taking future rate increases off the table, in case inflation pressures persist. He added that it would be “premature” to discuss interest rate cuts.

    Takeaways from the BoC announcement include:

    • Where rates may go: Macklem stated that BoC discussions around the interest rate are now shifting from “how high will it go?” to “how long will they stay at the current level before being reduced?”
    • Housing prices are high: An admission that “Shelter costs remain the biggest contributor to above-target inflation” means the BoC is semi-responsible for a solid chunk of the relatively high CPI numbers that we’re seeing.
    • No recession… maybe: “We don’t think we need a deep recession to get inflation back to target. But we do need this period of weak growth,” Macklem also stated.
    • Inflation’s moving target: Given that December’s CPI increase was 3.4%, it wasn’t a surprise to hear the BoC governor say, “Inflation is still too high, and underlying inflationary pressures persist. We need to give these higher rates time to do their work.”
    • Unemployment rates: Job vacancies are trending upward and are now close to pre-pandemic levels.
    • GDP growth expectations: The BoC expects zero GDP growth in the first quarter, and only 0.8% for the year.

    While Canadian borrowers are likely to grimace at the idea of inflation rates “doing their work,” the recent core inflation figures have backed the BoC into a bit of a corner. If a rate-cutting cycle started, only for inflation to once again trend upward, it could have devastating effects on people’s confidence that the BoC will eventually get inflation back in line. Once that confidence goes… it’s very difficult and economically painful to get it back. Options markets now believe there is about a 50% chance of a rate cut in April, with a very low probability of a cut in March, and a high probability of at least one cut by June.

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    Kyle Prevost

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  • S&P 500 notches first record high in two years in tech-driven run

    S&P 500 notches first record high in two years in tech-driven run

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    What to expect from the economy in 2024


    Interest rate cuts? Financial expert on what to expect in 2024

    05:24

    The stock market rallied to record highs on Friday, with Wall Street buoyed by investor expectations of interest rate cuts ahead by the Federal Reserve and robust corporate profits.

    With technology stocks driving early year gains, the S&P 500 rose 1.2% to a record 4,839, sailing above the broad index’s prior closing high of 4,796 in January 2022. The Dow Jones Industrial Average also hit new heights, surging nearly 400 points, or 1.1%, to reach its second record high since December. The Nasdaq Composite climbed 1.7%.

    “When the stock market last peaked, the Fed had yet to begin raising interest rates to combat inflation” Greg McBride, chief financial analyst for Bankrate, said in an email. “In the two years since, we saw the fastest pace of interest rate hikes in 40 years. With inflation now moving back toward the target of 2%, the focus is on when the Fed will begin trimming interest rates.”

    Investors were cheered Friday by a report from the University of Michigan suggesting the mood among U.S. consumers is brightening, with sentiment jumping to its highest level since July 2021. Consumer spending accounts for roughly two-thirds of economic activity. 


    How the U.S. avoided a recession in 2023

    04:10

    Perhaps more importantly for the Fed, expectations for upcoming inflation among households also seem to be anchored. A big worry has been that such expectations could take off and trigger a vicious cycle that keeps inflation high.

    Economists at Goldman Sachs started the week by predicting the central bank is likely to start lowering its benchmark interest rate in March and make five cuts all told during the year. 

    The investment bank expects the U.S. economy to come in for a “soft landing,” with modestly slowing economic growth, and for inflation to keep dropping this year. Goldman expects the central bank to gradually ease rates, which would steadily reduce borrowing costs for consumers and businesses. 

    John Lynch, chief investment strategist for Comerica Wealth Management, thinks robust corporate earnings and expectations for declining interest rates are likely to drive markets higher in 2024.

    —The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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  • Making sense of the markets this week: January 21, 2024 – MoneySense

    Making sense of the markets this week: January 21, 2024 – MoneySense

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    The acquisition looks to be turning out quite well for America’s largest bank, as it claimed that the former First Republic Bank contributed $4.1 billion in profit in 2023.

    Dimon provided some macroeconomic context in forward guidance. “The U.S. economy continues to be resilient, with consumers still spending, and markets currently expect a soft landing.” 

    Of course, being a banking CEO, he then had to hedge his position by saying deficit spending “may lead inflation to be stickier and rates to be higher than markets expect.” 

    New Morgan Stanley CEO Ted Pick cited two “major downside risks” as reasons for concern: geopolitical conflicts and the U.S. economy. 

    Mirroring Dimon’s “on one hand, and on the other hand” PR formula, Pick stated, “The base case is benign, namely that of a soft landing. But, if the economy weakens dramatically in the quarters to come and the [U.S. Federal Reserve] has to move rapidly to avoid a hard landing, that would likely result in lower asset prices and activity levels.”

    Like their Canadian banking brethren, the U.S. banks all reported substantial increased provisions for credit losses. This money, set aside to cover the inevitable increase in interest-led loan delinquencies, also weighs on banks’ bottom lines.

    Canadians looking for exposure to U.S. banks can get it through TSX-listed ETFs, such as the Harvest US Bank Leaders Income ETF (HUBL), RBC U.S. Banks Yield Index ETF (RUBY) and BMO Equal Weight US Banks Index ETF (ZBK). Investors can also get single-stock exposure to JPMorgan, Bank of America and Goldman Sachs in Canadian dollars through Canadian Depository Receipts (CDRs) listed on the Cboe Canada Exchange.

    Check MoneySense’s ETF screener for all ETF options in Canada.

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    Kyle Prevost

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